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Strategy CEO: Great Companies Survive ‘Near-Death Experiences’ and Bitcoin’s Logic Holds Through Paper Losses

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When a public company stacks billions of dollars in Bitcoin, watching that position swing by eight or nine figures is part of the job description. The real test isn’t the mark-to-market hit—it’s whether the people in charge flinch. Strategy CEO Phong Le made it clear this week that flinching is off the table.

In a Coinage interview, as recorded by the original report , Le was asked about the experience of watching paper losses pile up, and he framed it around a simple conviction: great companies don’t just ride out volatility—they’re shaped by it.

Le pointed to Amazon and Tesla as proof that near-death experiences forge strong leaders. It’s the kind of analogy that could sound cosmetic if it came from a firm with a lighter commitment. But Strategy—formerly MicroStrategy—has been an outlier in corporate America since 2020, when it began converting its treasury into Bitcoin with a velocity few companies have dared to match. That move placed the firm at the center of every subsequent Bitcoin correction, including the 2022 bear market that Le now credits with hardening the team’s conviction.

Why Paper Losses Don’t Rattle the Strategy Playbook

The CEO’s steady mindset doesn’t come from ignoring downside risk; it comes from a firm belief in what he called Bitcoin’s underlying logic. For a company that held over 150,000 bitcoin as of mid-2026, negative swings in the nine-figure range have been a recurring theme. In 2022, Strategy’s Bitcoin stash lost more than half its nominal value, and the market questioned whether a corporate treasury built around an asset with Bitcoin’s volatility could survive a credit cycle.

Le’s answer is that the 2022 drawdown didn’t expose a flaw—it stress-tested a thesis. The company didn’t liquidate. It didn’t pivot. By the time the market turned, Strategy’s team had internalized the price action as noise, and the firm’s balance sheet became a case study for how long-duration conviction can function inside a public company structure. That stance now separates Strategy from many early corporate adopters that trimmed or exited Bitcoin positions when the pressure was on.

Institutional Conviction in a Market That Still Doubts

Corporate Bitcoin treasuries remain a narrow club, and Strategy’s experience doesn’t translate neatly to firms with different capital structures or shareholder bases. The regulatory environment isn’t making it easier. Banks recently ramped up an effort to kill a landmark crypto bill just days before a Senate vote—a reminder that even basic infrastructure for on-chain asset custody and corporate accounting clarity remains unsettled.

Still, Le’s framing matters because it comes at a time when institutional Bitcoin demand is fragmenting. Exchange-traded funds have absorbed a significant portion of flow, and pure-play corporate treasuries are being watched more skeptically after some high-profile unwindings. Strategy’s continued—and vocal—commitment to a maximalist position signals that at least one public company sees the ETF wrapper as a complement, not a replacement, for direct treasury exposure.

Le’s invocation of “near-death experiences” isn’t just a leadership metaphor. It’s also a reminder that the companies most comfortable with Bitcoin’s volatility are the ones that have been forced to sit through its worst stretches without an exit. The question for the rest of the market is whether that kind of forced patience can be replicated inside corporate governance structures that don’t share Strategy’s founder-driven DNA.

What Remains Uncertain

Le didn’t outline any tactical changes to Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation plan, and the interview offered no clarity on how the firm manages liquidity during extended downturns. That’s not trivial. Holding Bitcoin through a drawdown requires access to working capital, and the cost of that capital can rise quickly when credit markets tighten. Strategy’s ability to navigate those conditions without tapping its Bitcoin stash remains one of the less-discussed features of its model.

There’s also the matter of succession and institutional memory. If conviction is built on surviving a bear market together, what happens when key people leave? The resilience Le describes is real, but it’s also personal—linked to a specific set of executives who endured 2022 together. Whether that becomes part of the company’s permanent culture or fades as the team evolves is an open question that goes beyond any single market cycle.

For now, Strategy’s signal is unambiguous: paper losses are tuition, and the education is Bitcoin’s long-term logic. The market will decide whether that tuition is paying off or just deferring a harder reckoning.

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